In the Beginning
On the nature of the ascent
A brief overview of "the ascent" and what it symbolises. A summary
of the content of subsequent chapters.
Chapter 1: Looking Towards Babel
Introducing the mysteries of Psycholinguistics
Introduction. The distinction between Linguistics and
Psycholinguistics. Discussion of the empirical and theoretical
tools. In short, addressing the question: What's so interesting
about our ability to understand and produce language?
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Chapter 2: Babies, Birth, and Language
What babies learn about language, even before they're
born
The in utero environment and what can be learned there. Newborns'
sensitivities to aspects of speech and intonation. Could this
sensitivity be innate? Discussion of some of the studies showing in
utero learning of language-specific phenomena, and some of the
studies with newborns showing their sensitivity to syllables. Why
such sensitivity is so fundamental to the acquisition of the
language.
Chapter 3: Chinchillas Do It Too
Learning to discriminate between different sounds
Infants can discriminate between individual sounds, even though the
physical differences are so small. But adults can discriminate only
those differences that are relevant to their specific language (so
Japanese have different sensitivities to English). What about
babies? They also discriminate only certain differences, but it's
as if they know about all possible languages. Could this be innate?
Probably not, as chinchillas can do it also. The fact that newborns
can also correct for rate of speech is also discussed.
Chapter 4: Words, and What We Learn To Do With
Them
Learning about words, and how to combine them
Identifying the sounds of the language is a prelude to associating
those sounds with meaning; learning about words. Some statistics on
comprehension/production vocabularies. Acquisition of knowledge
about different word types. Learning meaning, and the importance of
context. How do we, as young children, associate labels (i.e.
words) with these different contexts? The implications for the
acquisition of Grammar. Chomsky and Pinker's views on innate
knowledge. What exactly constitutes innate knowledge? An
alternative proposal is based on prosody and intonation (cf. Ch.
2). Discussion of the fact that infants don't simply learn, but
create language (with discussion of pidgin and creole languages,
and the critical period for language acquisition). This is the
final chapter devoted to language acquisition.
Chapter 5: Organizing the Dictionary
Phonemes, syllables, and other ways of looking up
words
How is the mental dictionary organized? How is any dictionary
organized (e.g. alphabetic, rhyming, or Chinese)? Do we first
interpret the sounds as sequences of phonemes and then look these
up? Do we first interpret them as syllables? What is the "currency"
of lexical look-up? What is the relevance of co-articulation? If
differences in the written language require different kinds of
dictionary, what about differences in spoken language? Do French
speakers use a different kind of dictionary to English speakers?
How could we know?
Chapter 6: Words, and How We (Eventually) Find
Them
Accessing the mental representations of words
Assuming we can "get into" the mental dictionary, how does the
search process proceed? When we go down a written page looking for
a word, we reject all the other words without reading their
entries, but is the mental search similar? Discussion of the
evidence supposing that the entries of "neighbouring" words are
accessed. Discussion of words having more than one meaning (e.g.
"bank"), and how all meanings are accessed irrespective of whether
they are appropriate in the context. Discussion of how in a word
like "rampart", we access "ram" "ramp" and "part" (and possible
even "am" "amp", "pa" and "art"!). How do we know this? What are
the implications for the amount of work we perform in recognizing
the intended words? And what are the implications of all this for
how we process sentences? A puzzle that is left for Chapter 13 is:
What might the "entry" for a word actually be? How could it be
represented in the brain?
Chapter 7: Time Flies Like An Arrow
Understanding sentences I: Coping with ambiguity
How does the meaning of a sentence depend on the meanings of the
words in the sentence? How do we extract this meaning? What happens
when the sentence contains ambiguous words? What is the status of
the Linguists' grammar? How do we go about finding out how we
resolve ambiguity, and what the psychological status of "syntax"
really is? Why is "the lecturer told the student that she should
have listened to to repeat the question" so difficult to
understand? Discussion of eye movement studies, and other
techniques for understanding the psychological processes underlying
sentence processing. Discussion of the role of intonation.
Chapter 8: Who's Doing What, And To Whom
Understanding sentences II: Identifying who's being talked
about, what they're doing, and who they're doing it to
Understanding sentences requires that we identify who's being
talked about, what they're doing, and who they're doing it to. But
how do we identify the characters? What's the difference in meaning
between "the cat" and "it"? What are pronouns for? What do they
mean? Why is it that there are restrictions on their meaning? Why
do the same restrictions occur in every language? And once we've
identified the characters being described, at what point do we
assign them their respective roles? Do we wait until the sentence
unambiguously tells us (as sentences generally do) which role
should be assigned to which character? Or do we jump the gun and
assign roles to the different characters even before we know who to
assign them to? And how do we determine this experimentally?
Chapter 9: On the Meaning of Meaning
The concepts associated with "understanding" and
"meaning"
Sentences have meaning, as do words, although of a different kind.
So what exactly does a sentence mean? And what's in the brain? How
could meaning be represented in neurones? Discussion of the concept
that the meaning of a word is simply a representation of the
context in which that word can occur. And what about the meanings
not of words, but of sentences? And how is this kind of meaning
represented in the structures of the brain? Finally, consideration
of the relationship between prediction and meaning allows us to
return full-circle to issues in learning.
Chapter 10: Exercising the Vocal Organs
How we produce words and sentences
So far, we've gone from sound to meaning, but what about the other
way around? The errors we make when speaking, such as "spoonerisms"
and "malapropisms", can tell us a lot about how we plan, and
execute, a spoken sentence. Why does it tell us so much? And what
does it tell us? Why is our understanding of how we produce
language so very different from our understanding of how we
understand language? Why is it not simply the same process in
reverse? What does the production sequence look like, and how might
it come about in the brain?
Chapter 11: The Written Word
Writing systems, reading, eye movements, and
Socrates
This chapter examines the differences between spoken and written
language, and the implications for the mechanisms that underlie our
ability to read. The alphabet is basically a phonetic spelling, so
do we simply convert what we see into something like what we hear?
What are the implications of irregular spellings? How do we learn
to read? Are all languages the same? Can they be learned in the
same way? What do the eyes do during normal reading? Do properties
of the spoken word influence the reading of the written word? Do
properties of the written word influence the way we hear words?
Literacy, and its influence on the perception of speech. And
finally, what Socrates had to say about writing...
Chapter 12: When It All Goes Wrong
Disorders of Language
Some speech errors are normal, but others are the result of a
breakdown in normal processing. Some are errors of comprehension,
others of production. Discussion of different kinds of aphasias.
Discussion of the different types of dyslexia (developmental and
acquired), and some of the properties of a language like English,
as opposed to a language like Italian, that makes it particularly
hard for certain kinds of dyslexic. And finally, other disorders of
language.
Chapter 13: Wiring-up a Brain
Artificial brains and language learning
How could something looking like a brain learn language? Basic
introduction to how neural networks can encode representations and
manipulate them. How learning proceeds. Simple networks, whose task
(i.e. "innate program") is simply to predict what is going to
happen next, can learn about language, and develop sensitivity to
syllables, different types of words, and so on. This chapter "wraps
up" many of the concepts introduced in the earlier chapters,
showing how something built from the same building blocks as a
human brain, could learn much that is relevant about
language.
Chapter 14: The Descent from Babel
Not all languages were created equal
A final collection of (selective) facts about differences between
languages. How languages may have evolved, and where they're
heading. And a final word on psycholinguistics.
Bibliography
Further Reading
For each chapter, references are provided to (i) general
non-specialist reading, (ii) the academic articles describing key
findings mentioned in the chapter, and (iii) academic articles (or
collections) describing other material relevant to the
chapter.
Index